Reading between the lines

Toronto artist Gein Wong unearths ancient language in her latest production


Toronto-based playwright, composer, poet and video artist Gein Wong’s work has touched audiences as far away as Australia. Her stories are grounded in social justice and draw on her history as a queer Chinese-Canadian woman.

As writer and co-director of Hiding Words (for you), Wong brings her largest production yet – with a talented cast and crew of 14 – to a transformed Enwave Theatre at Harbourfront Centre. The audience sits under silk drapes suspended on either side of an S-shaped stage.

The multimedia production fuses theatre, poetry, hip hop, Western and Chinese classical music, modern dance, performance art, film, video art and visual art as it presents interweaving stories about women finding their voices.

Wing-Yin is a bold girl growing up in 1850s Guangzhou on the eve of the Taiping rebellion. Grace is a Chinese-Canadian spoken-word artist who is interrogated for instigating a cyber attack on the Canadian government in 2012. In the second half of the production, Grace is transported to Hong Kong in 2007. There she meets Blackberry, a performance artist, and MC Yeung, a rapper. Both are planning a protest of the Beijing Olympics.

Nüshu, an ancient Chinese writing system that traces its roots back to 400 CE, unites the stories. At the time, girls were forbidden from reading and writing, so they created Nüshu, a language unrecognizable to men. The characters in Hiding Words (for you) become separated in their adult years but remain in touch using Nüshu in embroidery. Nüshu reads like poetry, love letters between “sworn sisters” – as these bonds became known.

Grace and Wing-Yin’s bond is strengthened through Nüshu, and an emotional reconnection near the end emphasizes their bond, which defies time and place. They find love, and in each other they find themselves.

Wong hopes the play will eventually reach audiences worldwide, and she hopes the success of such a large-scale production will open doors for more queer artists and performers of colour.

“I think it’s important to take stories about my communities and go big with them, create large-scale productions. Our stories are important and deserve to shine.”

The Deets:

Hiding Words (for you)
Runs till Sun, Sept 23
Enwave Theatre
Harbourfront Centre
235 Queen’s Quay W
harbourfrontcentre.com

Read More About:
Culture, Ontario, Toronto, Arts

Keep Reading

Collage with an image of the Book Boudoir's interior, which features candles on a wooden park bench that is suspended by metal chains, bookshelves, a ladder and a counter in front of a shop sign

How BookTok inspired this real-life romance bookstore

Edmonton’s Book Boudoir is building queer-inclusive community one page at a time
Collage with photos of rows of theatre seats, a "Buddies in Bad Times Theatre" sign, a person in a wheelchair lawn bowling, and masked people sitting in a theatre

Disabled queer organizers refuse to leave anyone behind

From low-sensory spaces to masked events, expanding the menu of options can help make queer spaces accessible to everyone
The cover of Cannon by Lee Lai; a self-portrait by Lee Lai

‘Cannon’ shows the cost of keeping in your feelings

Lee Lai’s latest graphic novel follows a woman on the verge of exploding
Pink and purple collage featuring images of a stack of books, a group of people reading and lounging in chairs around a table, and the front of a brick building with a sign reading "library"

Away from home or school, queer youth find space to hope

As anti-LGBTQ2S+ legislation targets young people, they find refuge in drop-ins and book clubs